Exactly where does the NRA draw a line?

Serious question: Just where does the NRA draw the line on personal ownership of arms? Do they think it's okay for people to walk around the mall with assault weapons? Is it okay to take them to sporting events, bars? Would it be fine if people could own their own little atomic bomb? After all, the government has them, and if they throw one my way, should I be able to throw one back at them? And what about people with mental illness? If you've ever been diagnosed with depression, does that disqualify you from gun ownership? Having a national registry of persons with mental illness would not have stopped the shooting at Sandy Hook as the shooter did not buy the gun.

4. How does the NRA profit from gun sales?

6. Are you sure?

The NRA is a 501(c)(4) organization and indicated that the NRA's total income in 2004 was $205,402,491

The report, Blood Money: How the Gun Industry Bankrolls the NRA, reveals that since 2005 contributions from gun industry "corporate partners" to the NRA total between $14.7 million and $38.9 million.Total donations to the NRA from all "corporate partners"--both gun industry and non-gun industry--for the same time period total between $19.8 million and $52.6 million. The vast majority of funds--74 percent--contributed to the NRA from “corporate partners” come from members of the firearms industry: companies involved in the manufacture or sale of firearms or shooting-related products

Now the second paragraph is a report from early 2011. I don't know if the report is stating contributions per year, or contributions from 2005-2010, or what their exact timeframe is. I looked at the report and didn't find that information either. Regardless, based on the first paragraph their direct gun manufacture corporate donors are small compared to their other donors and membership dues - but if those gun manufacturing companies go out of business (and no one takes their place), the NRA loses those donors. The gun industry promotes more gun buying. Many of these new gun owners join the NRA. Their membership dues and donations also bankroll the NRA. Less new gun owners = less new NRA members.